Preparation of DNA encoding factor XIIIA

ABSTRACT

The cDNA which codes for factor XIIIa has been isolated using a cDNA bank from human placenta and probes constructed on the basis of the amino acid sequence of factor XIIIa peptide fragments. It is possible with this cDNA not only to obtain factor XIIIa by gene manipulation in high purity but also to prepare diagnostic aids which permit the analysis of genetic factor XIIIa defects. Furthermore, it is possible on the basis of the amino acid sequence to prepare antibodies which are suitable for diagnostic aids and antibody columns.

This application is a continuation, of application Ser. No. 07/549,234, filed Jul. 9. 1990, now abandoned, which is a continuation application of Ser. No. 07/024,174, filed Mar. 10, 1987, now abandoned.

Coagulation factor XIII is the final member of the “coagulation cascade” in the natural process of blood coagulation in vertebrates. The enzymatically active form of factor XIII, factor XIIIa, also called “activated fibrin-stabilizing factor”, “fibrinoligase” or “plasma transglutaminase” and, hereinafter, “F XIIIa”, catalyzes the fusion of fibrin units in preexistent thrombi by intramolecular crosslinking (Lorand et al., Methods in Enzymology 80 (1981), 333-341; Curtis et al., Annals New York Academy of Sciences 1983, 567-576). The molecular weight of factor XIII from plasma is about 300 kD (Loewy et al., J. Biol. Chem. 236 (1961) 2634). The molecular weight of the active subunit F XIIIa is about 80 kD (Bohn and Schwick, Arzneimittelforschung 21 (1971) 1432). During the activation of factor XIII, thrombin splits off from the precursor a peptide which is about 4 kD in size and has a known sequence of 36 amino acids (Takagi and Doolittle, Biochemistry 13 (1974) 750-756). In addition, a sequence embracing four amino acids is known (Holbrook et al., Biochem. J. 135 (1973) 901-903).

The invention relates to a process for the preparation of F XIIIa by gene manipulation, to the mRNA necessary for this, to the cDNA obtained therefrom, to DNA structures and vectors containing all or part of this cDNA, to cells transformed with DNA of this type, and to the polypeptide expressed by these cells. The invention also relates to part-sequences of the amino acid sequence of F XIIIa, to specific antibodies obtained therewith, to diagnostic aids and antibody columns produced from these antibodies, and to a polypeptide obtained with the aid of such columns. The invention also relates to a medicament which contains F XIIIa, or parts of the amino acid sequence thereof with F XIIIa activity or mutants or variants of the F XIIIa or parts of the amino acid sequence, or any amino acid sequence expressed from a DNA which hybridizes under stringent conditions to F XIIIa DNA, obtained by expression in bacteria, yeast or animal cells. Another aspect of the invention relates to diagnostic aids which contain all or part of the DNA or RNA coding for F XIIIa, and to diagnostic methods with which body fluids and tissues are examined using diagnostic aids of this type. Further aspects of the invention and its preferred embodiments are illustrated in detail hereinafter and defined in the patent claims.

The drawings, in which the numbers coincide with those in the examples, illustrate the invention:

FIG. 1 shows the cDNA coding for F XIIIa (the coding region being shaded) and, below this, the DNA regions of the isolated and characterized clones.

FIG. 2 shows the construction of the expression plasmid pFXIII-13. For clarity, in this figure the starting plasmids pIC19H-12.1 and pIC19H-11.1, as well as the DNA fragments located immediately below them, are represented by double lines, as is the product pFXIII-13 constructed from the single-stranded fragments.

FIG. 3 is a diagram of the construction of the plasmid pTrc97A, FIG. 3 a that of pFXIII-C4 from pTrc97A and pFXIII-13, and finally FIG. 3 b the construction of pMB259 from pFXIII-13 and the known plasmids pIC20H and pBD2.

FIG. 4 is a diagram of the construction of the plasmid pMB240 from pFXIII-13 and the known plasmid pAAH5.

FIG. 5 shows the construction of pZET4 from the known plasmid pSV2dhfr and the plasmid pSVA STOP1, FIG. 5 a shows the construction of pSVF13 from PSVA STOP1 and pFXIII-13, FIG. 5 b shows the construction of pZF13 from pZET4 and pFXIII-13, and finally FIG. 5 c shows the construction of pHSF13 from pSVF13 and the known plasmid PSP6HS9.

FIG. 6 shows the DNA sequence and the corresponding deduced amino acid sequence from the cloned cDNA fragments in λgt10-11 and λgt10-12. The total length of the cDNA is 3905 basepairs. The underlined sequence between nucleotide positions 88 and 198 corresponds to the 36 amino acid sequence of Takagi and Doolittle. The sequence encodes a valine at nucleotide positions 187-189, as opposed to the leucine residue of Takagi and Doolittle. The underlined sequence between nucleotide positions 1021-1032 corresponds to the 4 amino acid sequence of Holbrook et. al. The broken lines underlining nucleotides 1507 to 1526 and 766 to 831, indicate the hybridization positions of the 20 mer and 66 mer probes, respectfully.

The amino acid sequence of F XIIIa fragments was determined for the construction of suitable probes. The corresponding peptide fragments were obtained by proteolysis or cleavage with cyanogen bromide. Based on knowledge of the amino acid sequences of such fragments, two oligonucleotide probes were synthesized, one 20 mer and one 66 mer.

In the 20 mer probe all theoretically possible codons for the amino acid sequence

-   -   Met-Met-Asp-Ile-Thr-Asp-Thr         were taken into account, with, in the case of the last amino         acid, the third position in the codon being omitted. The 20 mer         probe is thus 48-fold degenerate, i.e. a mixture of all 48         theoretically possible oligonucleotides coding for the said         amino acid sequence (Table 1; Appendix).

The 66 mer probe was selected on the basis of the following amino acid sequence

-   -   Tyr-Gly-Gln-Phe-Glu-Asp-Gly-Ile-Leu-Asp-Thr-Cys-Leu-Tyr-Val-Met-Asp-Arg-Ala-Gln-Met-Asp         and with the assistance of statistical data (Lathe, J. Molec.         Biol. 183 (1985) 1-12) (Table 2, Appendix).

These probes were used to screen a cDNA bank. The cDNA was prepared from mRNA from a mature human placenta, the mRNA being isolated from the latter, and the cDNA being prepared therefrom. The cDNA was provided with EcoRI ends and ligated into the EcoRI cleavage site of the phage vector λgt10. A positive clone, λgt10-12, which was identified with the abovementioned probe, was further analyzed (FIG. 1). The sequencing, by methods known-per se, resulted in the DNA sequence which codes for F XIIIa.

Rescreening of the cDNA bank with this DNA sequence resulted in isolation of further clones which expand both towards the 5′- and towards the 3′-end.

FIG. 1 shows the restriction map of the DNA sequence which codes for F XIIIa. “N” designates the N-terminal end and “C” designates the C-terminal end of the coding region, and “A(89)” designates the poly(A) sequence of 89 bases. This sequence represents the whole of the coding sequence of F XIIIa. Table 3 (Appendix) shows the DNA sequence found (coding strand) and, deduced therefrom, the amino acid sequence from the cloned cDNA fragments from λgt10-11 and λgt10-12. The total length of the cDNA is 3905 base-pairs. The N-terminal sequence embracing 36 amino acids found by Takagi and Doolittle (Loc. cit.) is present in the sequence which was found. This sequence is indicated in Table 3 with an unbroken line between nucleotide positions 88 and 198. In addition to the sequence found by Takagi and Doolittle, the cDNA codes for a valine in nucleotide positions 187-189. The sequence embracing four amino acids found by Holbrook et al. (Loc. cit.)—Gly-GLn-Cys-Trp—is coded for by the cDNA in positions 1021-1032. This sequence is likewise indicated by an unbroken line. In addition, the positions of the 20 mer and 66 mer oligonucleotide probes are indicated by broken lines. The 20 mer probe hybridizes between positions 1507 and 1526, and the 66 mer probe hybridizes between positions 766 and 831.

It is possible according to the invention to use the coding cDNA for the preparation of modified genes which code for proteins having altered biological properties. It is possible for this purpose to undertake, in a manner known per se, deletions, insertions and baseexchanges.

It is also possible, by the choice of the host, to influence the nature of the modification to the F XIIIa. Thus, there is no glycosylation in bacteria, while that taking place in yeast cells differs from that in higher eukaryotic cells.

Knowing the amino acid sequence of F XIIIa, it is possible to prepare, by conventional methods or gene manipulation, part-sequences of amino acids which can act as antigens for the preparation of polyclonal or monoclonal antibodies. Such antibodies can be used not only for diagnostic purposes but also for the preparation of antibody columns with which it is possible to remove F XIIIa from solutions which contain this factor in addition to other proteins.

It is also possible, by use of the cDNA or parts thereof, straightforwardly to isolate from a genomic bank the genomic clone which codes for F XIIIa and using which it is possible not only to express it in eukaryotic cells but also to gain further diagnostic information.

F XIIIa deficiencies can result in various syndromes which, to a large extent, are attributed to the inability to convert the precursors into the active form of the enzyme. Knowledge of the cDNA of F XIIIa now permits the preparation of diagnostic aids with which it is possible straightforwardly to establish whether genetic modifications are present.

Thus, it is possible according to the invention to prepare a highly pure factor XIIIa without any risk of contamination by, for example, viruses or other proteins. The dependence, which has existed to date, on human plasma or placentae as source of raw material has thus been overcome. In addition, the invention allows access to valuable diagnostic aids and thus the analysis of genetic F XIIIa defects.

The invention is illustrated in detail in the examples which follows. Unless otherwise stated, percentages relate to weight where they do not relate to amounts.

Apart from those explained in the text, the following abbreviations have been used:

-   -   EDTA=sodium ethylenediaminetetraacetate     -   SDS=sodium dodecyl sulfate     -   DTT=dithiothreitol     -   BSA=bovine serum albumin

EXAMPLES 1. Isolation of RNA From Human Placenta

RNA was obtained from a mature human placenta (by the method of Chirgwin et al., Biochemistry 18 (1979) 5294-5299). About 10 g of placental tissue was ground in liquid nitrogen, suspended in 80 ml of 4 M guanidinium thiocyanate containing 0.1 M mercaptoethanol and treated in a homogenizer (Ultraturrax) at 20,000 rpm for 90 sec. The lysate was centrifuged at 7,000 rpm for 15 min. (Sorvall GSA rotor) and 2 ml of 1 M acetic acid and 60 ml of abs. ethanol were added to the supernatant, which was allowed to precipitate at −20 C. overnight. After sedimentation at 6,000 rpm and −10 C. for 10 min, the nucleic acids were completely dissolved in 40 ml of 7.5 M guanidinium hydrochloride (pH 7.0) and precipitated with a mixture of 1 ml of 1 M acetic acid and 20 ml of abs. ethanol. To remove the DNA the precipitation was repeated once more with half the volumes. The RNA was dissolved in 12 ml of H₂O, precipitated with a mixture of 1.2 ml of 4 M potassium acetate and 24 ml of abs. ethanol, sedimented and finally redissolved in 10 ml of H₂O (1 ml per g tissue).

Isolation of Placental mRNA Containing Poly(A)

To isolate mRNA containing poly(A), the placental RNA was fractionated by oligo(dT)-cellulose chromatography (Aviv and Leder, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 69 (1973) 1408-1412) in 2 ml Pasteur pipettes in LiCl. About 5 mg of placental RNA were applied to the column in buffer 1 (500 mM LiCl, 20 mM tris (pH 7.5), 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% SDS).

Whereas the poly(A) RNA was bound to the oligo(dT)-cellulose, the poly(A) RNA could be eluted again. After a wash with buffer 2 (100 mM LiCl, 29 mM tris (pH 7.5), 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% SDS), the poly(A)⁺ RNA (placental mRNA) was eluted from the column with buffer 3 (5 mM tris (pH 7.5), 1 mM EDTA, 0.05% SDS).

For further purification, the poly(A) RNA was adjusted to buffer 1 and rechromatographed on oligo(dT)-cellulose. After this second purification step, the yield of placental poly(A)+RNA was about 4% of the RNA used.

Synthesis of cDNA From Human Placenta (Placental cDNA) and Double-stranded cDNA (dsDNA)

Before the cDNA synthesis, a check that the placental mRNA containing poly(A) was intact was carried out in a 1.5% agarose gel.

Then 4 μg of placental mRNA were dissolved in 65.5 μl of H₂O, denatured at 70° C. for 10 min, and cooled again in ice. The cDNA was synthesized in a 100 μl mixture after addition of 20 μl of RT₁ buffer (250 mM tris (pH 8.2) at 42° C., 250 mM KCl, 30 mM MgCl₂), 2.5 μl of 20 mM dNTP (i.e. all four deoxynucleoside triphosphates), 1 μl of 1 μg/mL oligo(dT), 1 μl of 1 M DTT, 2 μl of RNAsin and 8 μl of reverse transcriptase (24 U/μl) at 42° C. for 90 min.

Double-stranded cDNA (dsDNA) was synthesized by the method of Gubler and Hoffmann (Gene 25 (1983) 263-269). The synthesis was carried out immediately after the cDNA synthesis by addition of 305.5 μl of H₂O, 80 μl of RT₂ buffer (100 mM tris (pH 7.5), 25 mM MgCl₂, 500 mM KCl, 50 mM DTT, 250 μg/ml BSA), 2 μl of RNase H (2 U/μl), 2.5 μl of E. coli DNA ligase (5 U/μl), 5 μl of 15 mM β-NAD, and 5 μl of DNA polymerase I (5 U/μl) and incubation at 15° C. for 5 h. The reaction was stopped by heat inactivation (70° C., 30 min).

After addition of 55 μl of 250 μM dNTP, 55 μl of 10 mM tris (pH 7.5), 10 mM MgCl₂, 10 μg/ml BSA, 3 μl of T4 DNA polymerase I (1 U/μl), 2 μl RNase H (2 U/μl) and 2 μl of RNase A (2 μg/ml), the reaction mixture was incubated at 37° C. for a further 30 min in order to correct faulty syntheses of the polymerase I on the second DNA strand (“repair reaction”).

Ligation of EcoRI Linkers to the dsDNA, and Opening of the Linkers

To set up a placental cDNA bank, the dsDNA was provided with EcoRI ends in order to be able to ligate it in the EcoRI cleavage site of the phage vector λgt10 (T. Maniatis et al. (1982), Molecular Cloning, A Laboratory Manual, Cold Spring Harbor). For this purpose the dsDNA was

-   -   a) treated with EcoRI methylase in order to protect internal         EcoRI cleavage sites of the dsDNA, and     -   b) provided with EcoRI linkers which     -   c) were then opened with EcoRI.

Re a):

The methylase reaction of the dsDNA was carried out immediately after the repair reaction by addition of 25 μl of 500 mM EDTA (pH 8.0), 60 μl of methylase buffer (100 mM NaOAc (pH 5.2), 2 mg of S-adenosyl-L-methionine) and 2 μl of EcoRI methylase (20 U/μl) by incubation at 37° C. for 30 min.

The reaction mixture was extracted with phenol, and the dsDNA was precipitated with 60 μl of 4 M NaOAc and 1300 μl of ethanol. The dsDNA was washed twice with 70% ethanol, extracted once by shaking with ether, and dried.

Re b):

The EcoRI-methylated dsDNA was dissolved in 88 μl of H₂O and, after addition of 10 μl of ligase buffer (500 mM tris (pH 7.4), 100 mM MgCl₂, 100 mM DTT, 10 mM spermidine, 10 mM ATP, 1 mg/ml BSA) and 1 μl of T4 DNA ligase (10 U/μl), was Ligated with 1 μl of EcoRI linkers (0.5 pg/μl) (pGGAATTCC and pAGAATTCT) at 15° C. overnight.

Re c):

The volume of the ligase mixture was made up to 120 μl with 6 μl of H₂O, 12 μl of 10×EcoRI buffer and 2 μl of EcoRI (120 U/μl). The EcoRI digestion was carried out at 37° C. for 2 h.

Removal of Unbound Linkers via a Potassium Acetate Gradient and Size-selection of the dsDNA

To remove all the unbound EcoRI linkers from the dsDNA, the EcoRI reaction mixture was applied in toto to a potassium acetate gradient (5-20% KOAc, 1 mM EDTA, 1 μl/ml ethidium bromide) which was centrifuged (Beckman SW 65/rotor) at 50,000 rpm and 20° C. for 3 h. The gradient was fractionated from below in such a way that the volume of the first five fractions was 500 μl, and that of all the remainder was 100 μl. The fractions were precipitated with 0.01 volume of acrylamide (2 mg/ml) and 2.5 volumes of ethanol, washed once with 70% strength ethanol and dried, and each was taken up in 5 μl of H₂O.

To determine the size of the dsDNA, 1 μl of each fraction was analyzed in a 1.5% agarose gel. In addition, the quantity of dsDNA was determined on 1 μl of each fraction.

Fractions containing dsDNA with over 1000 bp were combined, and the sample was concentrated until the final concentration was 27 μg/ml.

Incorporation of the dsDNA Into the Phage Vector λgt10 and in vitro Packaging Reaction

The incorporation of the dsDNA into the EcoRI cleavage site of the phage vector λgt10 (Vector Cloning Systems, San Diego, Calif.) was carried out in a 4 μl ligase mixture: 2 μl of dsDNA, 1 μl of λgt10×EcoRI (1 μg/ml), 0.4 μl of ligase buffer, 0.5 μl of H₂O and 0.1 μl of T4 DNA ligase. The mixture was incubated at 15° C. for 4 h.

To establish the placental cDNA bank in the phage vector λgt10, the Ligase mixture was then subjected to an in vitro packaging reaction with the λ-lysogenic cell extracts E. coli NS 428 and NS 433 at room temperature for 2 h (Vector Cloning Systems, San Diego, Calif.; Enquist and Sternberg, Methods in Enzymology 68, (1979), 281-298). The reaction was stopped with 500 μl of suspension medium (SM: 0.1 M NaCl, 8 mM MgSO₄, 50 mM tris (pH 7.5), 0.01% gelatine) and 2 drops of chloroform.

Determination of the Titer and Analysis of the Placental cDNA Bank

The number of plaque-forming units (PFU) of the placental cDNA bank was determined using competent cells of the E. coli K 12 strain C600 HFL: it was 1×10⁶ PFU. About 80% of the phages contained DNA inserts larger than 1000 base-pairs.

Oligonucleotide Probes for Screening the Placental cDNA Bank

Two oligonucleotide probes (20 mer probe and 66 mer probe) were synthesized for analysis of the placental cDNA bank. Their sequences were deduced from the amino acid primary sequence of several proteolytic and BrCN fragments of F XIIIa. In some cases overlapping, and hence longer, amino acid sequences were found, and these permitted the synthesis of a very long probe, namely the 66 mer probe.

The 20 mer probe is a conventional DNA probe in which all the theoretically possible codons for the amino acid sequence Met-Met-Asp-Ile-Thr-Asp-Thr are taken into account (in the case of the terminal amino acid, Thr, the third position in the codon, called the “wobble” position, was omitted; see Table 1). The 20 mer probe is thus 48-fold degenerate, i.e. a mixture of all the 48 theoretically possible coding oligonucleotides for the said amino acid sequence.

The manner of construction and the use of the 66 mer probe essentially followed the rules of Lathe, J. Mol. Biol. 183 (1985) 1-12. In order to construct the 66 mer probe two 39 mer probes were synthesized (39 mer A with the sequence:

-   -   5′ TATGGCCAGTTTGAGGATGGCATCCTGGACACCTGTCTG 3′; and 39 mer B with         the sequence:     -   5′ GTCCATCTGGGCCCGGTCCATCACATACAGACAGGTGTC 3′). 39 mer A and 39         mer B have a complementary sequence comprising 12 bases so that         hybridization of the two sequences results in long free 5′ ends.

The two 39 mer probes were (as was the 20 mer probe) labeled at the 5′ end with T4 polynucleotide kinase in the presence of (γ-³²P)-ATP (about 1 μg of DNA, (γ-³²P)-ATP: 3000 Ci/mmol, 10 μCi/μl, with 6 μl/40 μl reaction mixture being used). The 20 mer probe had a specific activity of 1×10⁸ Bq/μg or 1.5×10⁶ Bq/pmol. The two 39 mer probes were heated at 95° C. for 5 min., mixed and slowly cooled to 4° C. in a cold room, and thus hybridized. Then about 1 μg of the hybridized 39 mer probes was treated with DNA polymerase 1, Klenow fragment, with the addition of (α-³²P)-dATP (3000 Ci/mmol, 10 μCi/μl, 4 μl/50 μl reaction mixture) (5′→3′ filling-in reaction). The filled-in 66 mer probe had a specific activity of 1.5×10⁸ Bq/μg. The DNA probes were stored at −20° C.; the 20 mer probe was used immediately for analysis (screening), while the 66 mer probe had previously been heated at 95° C. for 5 min and then rapidly cooled in an ice bath.

Since the 66 mer probe had been produced by hybridization of two 39 mers followed by a 5′→3′ filling-in reaction, it is possible to carry out various experiments. On the one hand, it is possible to hybridize cDNA banks with the denatured 66 mer DNA probe and, on the other hand, it is then possible to hybridize positive clones with the 39 mer A and B probes individually.

It is highly probable that the clones which hybridize both with the long probe and with both short 39 mer probes A and B have the desired sequence. Thus, the method of constructing a long, complex oligonucleotide probe and of “rescreening” the clones using the partially complementary short DNA probes, which has been described, represents an enhancement of specificity. In addition, it is possible with the long oligonucleotide and its partially complementary short partoligonucleotides to screen genomic banks with enhanced specificity. Another advantage of the said method is that the synthesis of shorter oligonucleotides can be carried out more easily and with higher yields and accuracy. The sequence of two enzymatic reactions, namely 1) T4 polynucleotide kinase for the (γ-³²P)-ATP labeling, and 2) DNA polymerase filling-in reaction with addition of (α-³²P)-dNTP, means that it is possible to obtain higher specific activities (at least 1×10⁸ Bq/μg DNA).

Screening of the Placental cDNA With F XIIIa-specific Oligonucleotides

5×10⁵ PFU of the placental cDNA bank were examined for CDNA sequences coding for F XIIIa using the 20 mer probe and the 66 mer probe. This entailed 3×10⁴ PFU being plated out with cells of the E. coli K 12 strain C 600 HFL in soft agar in 13.5 cm Petri dishes and incubated at 37° C. for 6 h. Any lysis which had taken place by this time was still incomplete. The plates were incubated in a refrigerator overnight, and the phages were transferred to nitrocellulose filters (Schleicher & Schüll, BA 85, Ref. No. 401124) (duplicates). The nitrocellulose filters and Petri dishes were marked with an injection needle in order to allow subsequent allocation. The Petri dishes were stored in a cold room during the processing of the nitrocellulose filters. The DNA on the nitrocellulose filters was denatured by placing the filters for 5 min. on filter paper (Whatman M 3) impregnated with 1.5 M NaCl, 0.5 M NaOH. The filters were then renatured in the same way using 1.5 M NaCl, 0.5 M tris (pH 8.0) and washed with 2×SSPE (0.36 M NaCl, 16 mM NaOH, 20 mM NaH₂PO₄, 2mM EDTA). The filters were then dried in vacuo at 80° C. for 2 h. The filters were washed in 3×SSC, 0.1% SDS (20×SSC=3 M NaCl, 0.3 M Na citrate) at 65° C. for 4 h, and prehybridized at 65° C. for 4 h (prehybridization solution: 0.6 M NaCl, 0.06 M tris (pH 8.3), 6 mM EDTA, 0.2% non-ionic synthetic sucrose polymer (Ficoll®), 0.2% polyvinylpyrrolidone 40, 0.2% BSA, 0.1% SDS, 50 μg/ml denatured herring sperm DNA). The filters were incubated overnight with the addition of 100,000-200,000 Bq of the Labeled oligonucleotide per ml of hybridization solution (as prehybridization solution but without herring sperm DNA) in beakers or in sealed polyethylene films, shaking gently. The hybridization temperature for the 20 mer probe and for the 39 mer probes was 42° C., and that for the 66 mer probe was 47° C.

The nitrocellulose filters were washed with 6×SSC, 0.05 M sodium pyrophosphate at room temperature for 1 h and at the particular hybridization temperature for a further hour. The filters were dried and autoradiographed overnight. Signals occurring on both duplicate X-ray films were allocated to the Petri dish, and the region (about 50 plaques) was punched out with the wide end of a Pasteur pipette, and the phages were resuspended in 1 ml of SM buffer. Positive phages were singled out over three rounds until a single clone was obtained.

A total of 5×10⁵ PFU of the placental cDNA bank was examined in several passages. 17 signals were identified on duplicate filters. Further screening under more stringent conditions resulted in 7 signals still being positive. Of these 7 PFU only one PFU showed a positive signal both after hybridization with the 20 mer and 66 mer probes and with the 39 mer probes A and B. This clone—called λgt10-12 hereinafter—has a sequence of 1704 base-pairs coding for F XIIIa and having an internal EcoRI cleavage site. Southern blot analysis shows that the smaller EcoRI fragment of 540 base-pairs hybridizes with the 20 mer DNA probe, and the larger fragment of 1164 base-pairs hybridizes with the 66 mer DNA probe.

On rescreening, it emerged from the Southern blot that there is more reaction with the 39 mer probe A than with the 39 mer probe B. Sequence analysis of the clone λgt10-12 showed subsequently that, over the entire length of the 66 mer probe, there are only seven mismatches to the sequence found for F XIIIa (Table 2). The seven mis-matches are distributed as follows: there are three in the 39 mer A probe and five mismatches in the 39 mer B probe (one mismatch occurs in the overlapping region, and thus is common to both). The five mismatches in the 39 mer B probe are clustered, which is possibly the reason for the weaker hybridization signals in the case of the 39 mer B probe.

Screening of the Placental cDNA With Nick-translated EcoRI Fragments

The two subcloned EcoRI fragments, which were 540 basepairs and 1164 base-pairs in length, were cloned into the EcoRI cleavage site of the commercially available vector pUC8 (1164 bp=pUC8-12.1 and 540 bp=pUC8-12.2) and were isolated therefrom preparatively with EcoRI, and nick-translated in the presence of (α-³²P)-dNTP. The specific activity of both fragments was 1×10⁸ Bq/μg DNA. Using the (³²P)-labeled fragments in several passages, about 1×10⁶ recombinant phages of the placental cDNA bank were examined (hybridization temperature 65° C.) and thus 13 hybridizing phages were identified. The phages were singled out over three rounds until a single homogeneous phage preparation was obtained. 20 ml lysates of each phage were set up, and the DNA was extracted. The DNA was digested with EcoRI and fractionated on a 1% agarose gel. The gel was subjected to the Southern blot technique, and the nitrocellulose filter was hybridized with the labeled 540 bp EcoRI fragment. Eleven phages showed hybridization signals. The nitrocellulose filter was boiled and hybridized with the nick-translated 1164 bp EcoRI fragment. Nine phages showed hybridization signals.

It was possible to identify, on the basis of the size of the hybridizing fragments, clones which, in comparison with λgt10-12, expand both towards the 5′ end such as λgt10-20 and towards the 3′ end such as λgt10-11. It was possible by use of these clones to determine the complete F XIIIa cDNA sequence. It was possible to combine part-sequences which were present by use of internal restriction sites or by hybridization of overlapping sequences. The complete cDNA sequence can be ligated into expression vectors and expressed in suitable prokaryotic or eukaryotic systems.

DNA Sequence Analysis

The phage clone λgt10-12 was multiplied, and the DNA was extracted. The two EcoRI fragments were isolated and cloned into the EcoRI site of the plasmid vector pUC8. pUC8-12.1 has the 1164 base-pair fragment, and pUC8-12.2 has the 540 base-pair fragment. In order to isolate the entire fragment comprising 1704 base-pairs, λgt10-12 was partially digested with EcoRI, and the 1704 base-pair band was isolated and cloned into the EcoRI site of pIC19H (Marsh et al., Gene 32 (1984) 481-485). The resulting plasmid is called pIC19H-12.

It was possible by cloning Sau 3A, AluI and TaqI subfragments of the clones pUC8-12.1, pUC8-12.2 and pIC19H-12 into pUC plasmids and M13 phages, followed by sequencing of the relevant regions using the enzymatic dideoxy method of Sanger and the chemical method of Maxam and Gilbert, to determine the sequence of the 1704 bp fragment (Table 3). The sequence shows only one open reading frame and codes for the first 542 amino acids of the factor XIIIa molecule.

Restriction analysis of the clone λgt10-12 or pIC19H-12 and of the clones λgt10-11 and λgt10-20 was carried out both by suitable single and multiple digestions and by partial digestion of (³²P)-labeled DNA fragments by the method of Smith and Birnstiel (Smith, H. O. and Birnstiel, M. L., Nucleic Acids Res. 3 (1976) 2387-2398) (FIG. 1).

The clone λgt10-11 has a fragment which is 2432 bp in size and has an internal EcoRI cleavage site. This fragment overlaps by 237 bp at the 3′ end the cDNA fragment from λgt10-12, and comprises the remaining 570 bp of the coding sequence plus 1625 bp of the non-coding region including a poly(A) sequence of 89 bases. The clone λgt10-20 with a cDNA fragment about 700 bp in size also has at the 5′ end 6 bases more (GAG GAA . . . ) than λgt10-12.

2. Preparation of a Clone Which Can be Expressed and Contains the Entire cDNA Coding for F XIIIa

The starting clones λgt10-11 and λgt10-12 were used to obtain a plasmid which contains the entire coding region of the F XIIIa cDNA. With the aid of partial EcoRI digestion, the insertion, comprising 1704 base-pairs, of λgt10-12 was cloned into the EcoRI site of pIC19H (Marsh et al., loc. cit.). The resulting plasmid pIC19H-12.1 was used subsequently (see FIG. 2). The clone λgt10-11 has an insertion 2432 base-pairs in size and has an internal EcoRI cleavage site. The left (“5′-terminal”) EcoRI fragment, which is 1224 base-pairs in size and embraces the C-terminal 570 base-pairs of the coding sequence plus 654 base-pairs of the 3′ non-coding region, was likewise cloned into the EcoRI cleavage site of pIC19H. The resulting plasmid pIC19H-11.1 was used subsequently (FIG. 2). The plasmids pIC19H-12.1 and pIC19H-11.1 have the coding region for F XIIIa in the same orientation in the vector and have an overlapping region which comprises 237 base-pairs. This overlapping region was used to construct from the part-clones pIC19H-12.1 and pIC19H-11.1 a clone which embraces the entire coding region. This entailed preparation, from the two plasmids mentioned, of partially single-stranded heteroduplex molecules by hybridization in vitro (FIG. 2) and transformation of the reaction mixture into E. coli. By utilization of the repair mechanisms of the bacterium (3′→5′ exonuclease activity, 5′→3′ polymerization activity of the enzyme DNA polymerase I), a plasid with the entire coding region was obtained.

Specifically, this entailed 1 μg of the DNA of each of the plasmids pIC19H-12.1 (ClaI-digested) and pIC19H-11.1 (BamHI-digested) being mixed and precipitated with ethanol. The DNA was dried in vacuo, taken up in 20 μl of H₂O and, after addition of 5 μl of 1 N NaOH, incubated at room temperature for 10 minutes. The following were then added in the sequence indicated: 200 μl of H₂O, 25 μl of 1 M tris.HCl (pH 8.0) and 50 μl of 0.1 N HCl. The reaction mixture was incubated at 65° C. for 3 hours, precipitated with ethanol, and dried. The DNA was resuspended in 20 μl of H₂O and transformed by known methods into E. coli, and the cells were plated onto LB-amp plates and incubated overnight. Of the total of 96 ampicillin-resistant clones, 24 clones were worked up by the alkali method (Birnboim and Doly, Nucl. Acid Res. 7 (1979) 1513-1523), and the plasmids were characterized by restriction endonucleolysis with HindIII, EcoRI, BamHI and PvuII. Six plasmids showed the expected restriction pattern. One of these plasmids, pFXIII-13 (FIG. 2), was characterized in detail. This entailed the StuI (position 1225)-PvuII (position 1870) fragment, which embraces the 237 base-pair overlapping region, being sequenced, and the DNA sequence was confirmed as correct. The plasmid pFXIII-13 comprises 2693 base-pairs of FXIIIa cDNA, of which 78 bp are of the 5′ non-translated region, 2196 bp are the entire coding region, and 419 bp are of the 3′ non-translated region. pFXIII-13 was the starting plasmid for all subsequent expression experiments.

3. Expression of Biologically Active Factor XIIIa in E. coli

a) Construction of F XIIIa Expression Plasmids

FXIII-13 has the F XIIIa cDNA insert in the correct orientation with respect to the lac promoter and in the correct reading frame with respect to the lacZ α-peptide. pFXIII-13 is thus able to induce the synthesis of a F XIIIa fusion protein in E. coli. The molecular weight of this protein comprises the 732 amino acids of natural F XIIIa together with 16 vector-coded amino acids plus 28 amino acids specified by the 5′ noncoding region. These additional 44 amino acids are located at the N-terminal end of the fusion protein. The expected molecular weight of this protein is 85,250 D (Tab. 4).

An expression plasmid which uses in place of the lac promoter a more efficient trp/lac hybrid promoter was subsequently constructed. For this, pKK233-2 (Amann and Brosius, Gene 40 (1985), 183-190) was cut with EcoRI and treated with Bal31l (FIG. 3). The DNA was then cut with PvuII, and the fragment 2800 base-pairs in size was purified on a PAA gel. This fragment was religated in the presence of a BglII linker (5′-CAGATCTG). The resulting plasmid pTrc89-1 (FIG. 3) was cut with NcoI and HindIII, and the synthetic linker

-   -   5′ CATGGAATTCGA 3′         -   3′ CTTAAGCTTCGA 5′             was incubated together with the 2800 base-pair fragment in a             ligase mixture. The resulting plasmid, pTrc96A (FIG. 3), was             cut with EcoRI and HindIII, and the fragment 2800 base-pairs             in size was gel-purified and ligated with the EcoRI-HindIII             linker which is 55 base-pairs in size from pUC18. The             resulting plasmid is pTrc97A (FIG. 3). In contrast to             pKK233-2, pTrc97A has, downstream of the NcoI site which             occurs only once in the plasmid, the polylinker from pUC18             and thus has numerous cloning sites.

The FXIIIa cDNA cloned into pFXIII-13 has a PstI site 21 base-pairs 5′ away from the ATG initiation codon (position 61). The next PstI site is located in the 3′untranslated region (position 2398). The PstI fragment which is 2337 base-pairs Long was isolated from pFXIII-13 and ligated into the PstI site of pTrc97A. The resulting plasmid with the PstI fragment in the desired orientation is pFXIII-C4 (FIG. 3 a ). The expected FXIII molecule specified by pFXIII-C4 has 22 additional N-terminal amino acids, 15 of them being vector-coded and 7 being specified by the 5′ non-coding region of the F XIII cDNA. The expected molecular weight of this protein is 82,830 D (Tab. 4).

Use of thrombin to cleave off the 37 amino-terminal amino acids converts the F XIIIa into the active form. Since such a F XIIIa molecule which has already been activated is of therapeutic interest, an attempt was made to express in E. coli a F XIIIa that can be shortened by thrombin cleavage. In order to obtain a high yield the cloning was carried out in such a way that the shortened F XIIIa is expressed in the form of a hybrid protein, fused to an E. coli β-galactosidase fragment. The SmaI-HindIII fragment which is about 2700 bp in size from pFXIII-13 was isolated and ligated into pBD2IC2OH which had been hydrolyzed with SmaI and HindIII. In the new plasmid pMB259 (FIG. 3 b ), the coding region of the cDNA for F XIIIa from amino acid Pro₃₇ to Met₇₃₂ is located in the reading frame applying to the 375 aminoterminal amino acids of the β-galactosidase, and it has the thrombin cleavage site Arg₃₈/Gly₃₉ so that it is possible to obtain activated F XIIIa by thrombin cleavage from the synthesized fusion proteins.

The expression vector pBD2IC20H had been constructed by ligating the polylinker region, which comprises 58bp, of the plasmid pIC20H (Marsh et al., loc. cit.) as BamHI-HindIII fragment in pBD2 (Broker, Gene Anal. Techn. 3 (1986) 53-57) which has the lac promoter.

b) Expression

It was found that E. coli cells of the strain D29A1 which are transformed with pFXIII-13, with pFXIII-C4 or with pMB259 are able to synthesize the expected F XIIIa proteins. The expression of F XIII by the plasmids pFXIII-13, pMB 259 and pFXIII-C4 can be induced with IPTG. Comparison of protein extracts after IPTG induction of E. coli D29A1 (pFXIII-13) and D29A1 (PFXIII-C4) on PAA gels stained with Coomassie blue showed the expected molecular weights of the F XIII fusion proteins. The estimated expression of the “44aa FXIII fusion protein” is about 5 times that of the “22aa FXIII fusion protein”.

It was also found that the F XIIIa molecules specified by pFXIII-13 and pFXIII-C4 have biologicat activity. In contrast, no F XIII activity was found in E. coli D29A1 control extracts. The activity found in the clot stability assay (Karges, in Bergmeier, Methods of Enzymatic Analysis, Volume 5, Enzymes 3: Peptidases, Proteinases and their Inhibitors, pages 400-410) is 5 μg/l for E. coli D29A1 (pFXIII-13), based on the E. coli culture (OD₂₅₀=1.5), and is 15 μg/l for D29A1 (pFXIII-C4).

The amount of factor XIII found in the F XIIIa-specific ELISA is 1.5 mg/l, based on the E. coli culture, for pFXIII-13 and is 3 mg/l for pFXIII-C4. The discrepancy between the amounts of F XIII measured in the biological assay and in the ELISA derives from the fact that the major part (>90%) of F XIII in the E. coli cell is in the form of an insoluble precipitate which is biologically inactive and dissolves only in 7 M urea. The soluble fraction of the F XIII molecules present in E. coli extracts shows in the Ouchterlony test (Ouchterlony, Progr. Allergy 5 (1958) 1) a precipitation curve which is substantially identical to that of F XIII isolated from placenta.

The expression of eukaryotic proteins in E. coli in the form of insoluble protein aggregates has already been described for several proteins. These proteins can be dissolved out of such aggregates using a chaotropic agent and can be converted by suitable renaturing conditions into their biologically active form.

4. Expression of F XIII in Yeasts

The synthesis of biologically active F XIII obtained by gene manipulation from yeasts was achieved by incorporating the cDNA coding for F XIII into expression vectors which are able to replicate autonomously in yeasts. It was possible to isolate F XIII-active protein from extracts of the recombinant clones.

The conditions for growing yeasts and the molecular biological methods are described in Dillon et al., Recombinant DNA Methodology, John Wiley & Sons, New York (1985) and in Maniatis et al., loc. cit.

The F XIII cDNA was isolated from the vector pFXIII-13 as a HindIII fragment about 2700 bp in size, and was cloned into the HindIII site of the vector pAAH5 (Ammerer, Meth. Enzymol. 101 (1983), 192-201). Thus, the F XIII cDNA in the resulting plasmid pMB240 (FIG. 4) is under the control of the strong ADHI promotor which contains the gene expression signals of alcohol dehydrogenase. The plasmid pMB240 was transformed into baker's yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, strain Leu 2-3, Pep 4-3, by the method of Itoh et al. (J. Bacteriol. 153 (1983), 163-168) and Leu⁺ transformants were selected on YNB minimal medium. One colony of transformed yeast cells was used to inoculate a liquid culture with YNB medium. After growth at 30° C. for two days, transfer into complex YPB medium was carried out and, after a further three days, the cells were removed by centrifugation and were disrupted with a glass bead mill in isotonic saline solution containing 100 mM sodium citrate (pH 7.2). The cell extract was subjected to high-speed centrifugation in a Sorvall high-speed centrifuge, in a SS34 rotor, at 20,000 rpm and 4° C. for 1 hour.

The cell-free supernatant of S. cerevisiae (pMB240) was analyzed by the Western blot method. In addition to a band which can be detected in the same position as F XIII from placenta, a protein of about 116,000 D reacted specifically with the anti-F XIII serum used. This proves that part of the F XIII formed in yeasts is glycosylated. The glycosylation of proteins is often a factor prolonging the half-life of proteins, especially plasma proteins. In addition, carbohydrate side-chains may increase the activity or extend the duration of the action of plasma proteins, for example antithrombin III. A F XIII which is expressed in yeast and which, in contrast to F XIII obtained from placenta, is glycosylated or has undergone posttranslatimal modificaiton in some other way can have, owing to an increased activity, advantages over F XIII from placenta.

The cell-free supernatant was examined for F XIII by an ELISA, and the F XIII concentration was found to be 150 ng/ml, based on the yeast culture. The biological activity of F XIII was determined by the method of Karges, loc. cit., and confirmed the concentrations measured in the ELISA. It was possible to rule out a non-specific F XIII-like activity by yeast proteins because the biological activity of the F XIII obtained from baker's yeast could be specifically inhibited by anti-F XIII antibodies.

5. Expression of F XIIIa in Animal Cells

a) Construction of Expression Vectors for Animal Cells

The expression vector PSVA STOP1 is proposed in German Patent Application P 36 24 453.8 (example 1 of this application, which relates to the synthesis of this vector, has been extracted and is reproduced in the Appendix). Apart from this plasmid, use was made of the vectors pZET4 (see below) and pSP6HS9, which has the Drosophila heat shock protein 70 promotor (Wurm et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83 (1986) 5414-5418), for the expression of F XIIIa in animal cells.

pZET4 (FIG. 5): the plasmid pSVA STOP1 was cut with BamHI, and the vector fragment which is 2.6 kb in size and has the SV40 early promotor was isolated. The BglII-BamHI fragment 0.85 kb in size from pSV2dhfr (Lee et al., Nature 294 (1981) 228-232) was ligated into the vector which had been pretreated in this way, which resulted in the plasmid pZET4. Located on the 0.85 kb fragment from pSV2dhfr are mRNA splice sites from exonintron joins, and the polyadenylation site of the gene for the t antigen from the SV40 DNA.

b) Construction of F XIIIa Expression Vectors for Animal Cells

pSVF13 (FIG. 5 a ): the expression vector PSVA STOP1 was cut with HindIII and XbaI. A HindIII-XbaI fragment, about 2.7 kb in size and having the F XIIIa cDNA, from pFXIII-13, was ligated into the vector which had been treated in this way. The F XIIIa transcription unit on pSVF13 has no mRNA splice sites.

pZF13 (FIG. 5 b ): a HindIII fragment about 2.7 kb in size and containing the F XIIIa cDNA was isolated from the plasmid pFXIII-13. The resulting 5′ protruding end was eliminated by filling in the complementary strand with DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment). The expression vector pZET4 was linearized by cutting at the unique XbaI site. The resulting 5′ protruding end was likewise eliminated by filling in the complementary strand with DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment). Ligation of the filled-in vector with the filled-in F XIIIa cDNA fragment results in the F XIIIa expression plasmid pZF13. As in pSVF13, the F XIIIa cDNA is under the transcriptional control of the SV40 early promotor but is provided with mRNA splice sites.

pHSF13 (FIG. 5 c ): the plasmid pSVF13 was partially digested with EcoRI, and a fragment about 2.9 kb in size and having the F XIIIa cDNA followed by the SV40 polyadenylation site for early transcripts was isolated. This fragment was ligated into the unique EcoRI site of the plasmid pSP6HS9 downstream of the heat shock protein 70 promotor.

c) DHFR Expression Vectors for the Cotransfection of CHO (Chinese Hamster Ovary) dhfr^(− Cells)

Either the DHFR vector pSV2dhfr (Lee et al., loc. cit.) or the promotorless DHFR plasmid pSVOAdhfr (German Patent Application P 36 24 453.8, see Appendix) was used for the cotransfection with the described F XIIIa expression vectors in CHO dhfr⁻ cells. Both vectors have the DHFR cDNA from the mouse.

d) Vector Conferring G418 Resistance for the Cotransfection of BHK (Baby Hamster Kidney) Cells

The F XIIIa expression vectors which have been described were cotransfected with the vector pRMH140 (Hudziak et al., Cell 31 (1982), 137-146) in BHK cells.

e) Expression of F XIIIa in CHO Cells

Cotransfection of the plasmid pZF13 with the DHFR vector pSV2dhfr, and of the expression plasmid pSVF13 together with the DHFR vector pSV0Adhfr, was carried out using the calcium phosphate precipitation method (Graham and van der Eb, Virology 52 (1973), 456-467) in CHO dhfr⁻ cells. This entailed 20 μg of the particular F XIIIa expression plasmid (pZF13 or pSVF13) being mixed and coprecipitated with 5 μg of the DHFR vectors (PSV2dhfr or pSV0Adhfr). The coprecipitate was used for transfection as described above (0.5×10⁶ cells in a 25 cm² culture bottle). After 3 days, the cells were trypsinized, transferred into three 60 mm Petri dishes and mixed with selection medium (containing no glycine, hypoxanthine or thymidine). The only cells which survive under these conditions are those which have undergone stable transfection with the DHFR gene. Colonies of transfected cells become visible on the Petri dishes after 1-3 weeks. The following transfection rates were achieved by this method:

-   -   pSV2dhfr 5×10⁻⁵/plate     -   pSV0Adhfr 1×10⁻⁵/plate

Individual clones were isolated and multiplied in a medium containing no glycine, hypoxanthine or thymidine.

A specific ELISA with a lower detection limit of about 3 ng/ml was used to detect F XIIIa in culture supernatants and cell lysates of the individual clones. Culture supernatants were used as such in the ELISA. The cell lysates were prepared as follows: Confluent cells in 25 cm² culture bottles were washed twice in 40 mM tris.HCl (pH 7.4), 1 mM EDTA, 150 mM NaCl, taken up in 150 μl of 0.25 M tris.HCl (pH 7.8), 5 mM DTT, 2% glycerol, 0.2% detergen α-[4-(1,1,3,3-Tetramethylbutyl)phenyl]-Ω-hydroxypoly(oxy-1,2-ethanediyl). (Triton X100), and lyzed by freezing and thawing three times.

Insoluble constituents of the cells were removed by centrifugation. The lysate was diluted 1:2.5 for use in the ELISA. The detection method which has been described was applied to 17 clones for the combination of the plasmids pZF13/pSV2dhfr, and one clone expressing F XIIIa (CHO 59-5-C7) was found. After cotransfection with the plasmids pSVF13/pSV0Adhfr and analysis of 12 clones, a further F XIIIa-expressing clone (CHO 60-3-C1) was detected. With both the positive clones it was possible to detect F XIIIa in the medium and in the lysate in the same relative amounts. In order to determine quantitatively the expression rate of the lines producing F XIIIa the following standard procedure was carried out:

0.5×10⁶ cells were plated out in 5 ml medium in 25 cm² culture bottles. The medium was changed after 24 hours (5 ml). Another 24 hours later the medium was removed, the cell count was determined, and lysates were prepared. For all the expression rates (ng/10⁶ cells/24 h) stated hereinafter, the cell count per 25 cm² bottle at the end of the test was 1±0.25×10⁶ cells. The table which follows shows the expression rate of the basic clones tested in the manner described:

extracellular intracellular (ng/10⁶ cells/ (ng/10⁶ cells/ 24 h) 24 h) CHO 59-5-C7 12 9 CHO 60-3-C1 17 13 On SDS electrophoresis followed by F XIIIa-specific immunoblotting of lysates and supernatants of the clone CHO 59-5-C7 and the clone CHO 60-3-C1, in each case one band with the molecular weight of the protein isolated from human placenta showed a reaction.

The clone CHO 59-5-C7 was exposed to increasing concentrations of methotrexate (Mtx) for gene amplification. Starting with a concentration of 10 nM Mtx and a 4-transfer adaptation time, the Mtx concentration in the medium was increased to 50 nM. The following expression rates were determined in the standard procedure:

extracellular intracellular Mtx (nM) (ng/10⁶ cells/24 h) (ng/10⁶ cells/24 h) 0 12 9 10 19 16 50 38 66 f) Expression of F XIIIa in BHK Cells

20 μg of each of the F XIIIa expression plasmids pZF13, pSVF13 and pHSF13 were cotransfected with 5 μg of the plasmid pRMH140 which codes for G418 resistance, by the calcium phosphate precipitation method described in example 5e) in BHK cells. After 3 days, the cells were trypsinized, transferred into three 60 mm Petri dishes and mixed with selection medium containing 400 μg/ml G418. After 12 days about 200-300 G418 resistant colonies had grown in each Petri dish. The total number of clones was trypsinized and subjected to transfers as combined clone (CC) in 25 cm² culture bottles (5 ml of medium).

In the case of cells transfected with pZF13 and pSVF13, where an 80-100% confluence had been reached F XIIIa was determined in the medium and in the relevant lysate (see example 5e))using a specific ELISA. Combined clones which had been transfected with pHSF13 and had likewise reached 80-100% confluence were mixed with fresh medium which had been preheated to 42° C. and were incubated at 42° C. for one hour. After another replacement of the medium with fresh medium equilibrated at 37° C., the cells were maintained at 37° C. for 24 hours. The medium and lysates were then examined for their content of F XIIIa as described above. The table which follows summarizes the cellular distribution of F XIIIa for the various combined clones.

extracellular intracellular (ng) (ng) BHK-MK1 (pZF13) 65 22 BHK-MK2 (pZF13) 80 20 BHK-MK3 (pSVF13) 85 18 BHK-MK5 (pHSF13) 170 11

The expression rates relating to the F XIIIa present in the medium were determined for the individual combined clones by the standard procedure described in example 5e). For all the expression rates (ng/10⁶ cells/24 h) stated hereinafter, the cell count per 25 cm² bottle at the end of the test was 4.5±0.5×10⁶ cells.

extracellular (ng/10⁶ cells/24 h) BHK-MK1 (pZF13) 3.4 BHK-MK2 (pZF13) 5.6 BHK-MK5 (pHSF13) 3.8 BHK-MK6 (pHSF13) 3.8

Since the transfected BHK lines described hitherto have been mixed populations including cells which were not producing or differed in their expression rates, it was subsequently attempted to isolate genetically uniform cell lines with high expression rates by singling out clones. For this purpose, cells from the particular combined clone were placed on microtiter plates in a concentration of 1 cell/well, 2 cells/well or 4 cells/well. Supernatants from wells in which only one clone had grown were analyzed by the F XIIIa-specific ELISA. The clones with the highest expression rates were multiplied in 25 cm² culture bottles, and their expression rates were investigated by the standard procedure described above. The table which follows shows the expression rate of clones obtained by singling out BHK-MK1 (pZF13) in the manner described.

extracellular (ng/10⁶ cells/24 h) BHK MK1 (pZF13) 3.4 BHK MK1-A12 (pZF13) 8 BHK MK1-E2 (pZF13) 25 BHK MK1-F12 (pZF13) 14 BHK MK1-C1 (pZF13) 22

It was also shown, taking the example of the BHK cell line MK1-E2, that the F XIIIa molecules synthesized by these cells have biological activity. 10⁸ cells of the BHK MK1-E2 line and of the non-transfected BHK line which was used (negative control) were taken up in 1.5 ml of 0.25 M tris.HCl (pH 7.8) containing 2% glycerol. The cells were lyzed by freezing and thawing three times, followed by treatment in a Dounce homogenizer. After removal of insoluble constituents by centrifugation, the lysate was used in the biological assay (see example 3). The following F XIIIa activities were found:

BHK MK1-E2 0.06 units/10⁸ cells BHK (not transfected) 0 ″

TABLE 1 20 mer probe, 48-fold degenerate Amino acid sequence Met Met Asp Ile Thr Asp Thr DNA probe ATG ATG GAT ATT ACT GAT AC C C A C A C G

TABLE 2 66mer probe, non-degenerate Amino acid #  1   2   3   4   5   6   7   8   9   10  11  12  13  14  15  16  17  18  19  20  21  22 Amino acid Tyr Gly Gln Phe Glu Asp Gly Ile Leu Asp Thr Cys Leu Tyr Val Met Asp Arg Ala Gln Met Asp sequence Possible mRNA UAU GGU CAA UUU GAA GAU GGU AUU UUA GAU ACU UGU UUA UAU GUU AUG GAU CCU GCU CAA AUG GAU sequence UAC GGC CAG UUC GAG GAC GGC AUC UUG GAC ACC UGC UUG UAC GUC     GAC CCG GCG CAG     GAC     GGA                 GGA AUA CUU     ACA     CUU     GUA         CGA GCA     GGG                 GGG     CUC     ACG     CUC     GUG         CGG GCG                                 CUA             CUA                 AGA                                 CUG             CUG                 AGG 66mer probe TAT GGC CAG TTT GAG GAT GGC ATC CTG GAC ACC TGC CTG TAT GTG ATG GAC CGG GCC CAG ATG GAC Sequence found TAT GGT CAG TTT GAA GAT GGC ATC CTG GAC ACT TGC CTG TAT GTG ATG GAC AGA GCA CAA ATG GAC

TABLE 3     1 GAGGAAGTCCCCGAGGCGCACAGAGCAAGCCCACGCGAGGGCACCTCTGGAGGGGAGCGCCTGCAGGACCTTGTAAAGTC   81 AAAA MET SER GLU THR SER ARG THR ALA PHE GLY GLY ARG ARG ALA VAL PRO PRO ASN ASN      ATG TCA GAA ACT TCC AGG ACC GCC TTT GGA GGC AGA AGA GCA GTT CCA CCC AAT AAC  142 SER ASN ALA ALA GLU ASP ASP LEU PRO THR VAL GLU LEU GLN GLY VAL VAL PRO ARG GLY TCT AAT GCA GCG GAA GAT GAC CTG CCC ACA GTG GAG CTT CAG GGC GTG GTG CCC CGG GGC  202 VAL ASN LEU GLN GLU PHE LEU ASN VAL THR SER VAL HIS LEU PHE LYS GLU ARG TRP ASP GTC AAC CTG CAA GAG TTT CTT AAT GTC ACG AGC GTT CAC CTG TTC AAG GAG AGA TGG GAC  262 THR ASN LYS VAL ASP HIS HIS THR ASP LYS TYR GLU ASN ASN LYS LEU ILE VAL ARG ARG ACT AAC AAG GTG GAC CAC CAC ACT GAC AAG TAT GAA AAC AAC AAG CTG ATT GTC CGC AGA  322 GLY GLN SER PHE TYR VAL GLN ILE ASP LEU SER ARG PRD TYR ASP PRO ARG ARG ASP LEU GGG CAG TCT TTC TAT GTG CAG ATT GAC CTC AGT CGT CCA TAT GAC CCC AGA AGG GAT CTC  382 PHE ARG VAL GLU TYR VAL ILE GLY ARG TYR PRO GLN GLU ASN LYS GLY THR TYR ILE PRO TTC AGG GTG GAA TAC GTC ATT GGT CGC TAC CCA CAG GAG AAC AAG GGA ACC TAC ATC CCA  442 VAL PRO ILE VAL SER GLU LEU GLN SER GLY LYS TRP GLY ALA LYS ILE VAL MET ARG GLU GTG CCT ATA GTC TCA GAG TTA CAA AGT GGA AAG TGG GGG GCC AAG ATT GTC ATG AGA GAG  502 ASP ARG SER VAL ARG LEU SER ILE GLN SER SER PRO LYS CYS ILE VAL GLY LYS PHE ARG GAC AGG TCT GTG CGG CTG TCC ATC CAG TCT TCC CCC AAA TGT ATT GTG GGG AAA TTC CGC  562 MET TYR VAL ALA VAL TRP THR PRO TYR GLY VAL LEU ARG THR SER ARG ASN PRO GLU THR ATG TAT GTT GCT GTC TGG ACT CCC TAT GGC GTA CTT CGA ACC AGT CGA AAC CCA GAA ACA  622 ASP THR TYR ILE LEU PHE ASN PRO TRP CYS GLU ASP ASP ALA VAL TYR LEU ASP ASN GLU GAC ACG TAC ATT CTC TTC AAT CCT TGG TGT GAA GAT GAT GCT GTG TAT CTG GAC AAT GAG  682 LYS GLU ARG GLU GLU TYR VAL LEU ASN ASP ILE GLY VAL ILE PHE TYR GLY GLU VAL ASN AAA GAA AGA GAA GAG TAT GTC CTG AAT GAC ATC GGG GTA ATT TTT TAT GGA GAG GTC AAT  742 ASP ILE LYS THR ARG SER TRP SER TYR GLY GLN PHE GLU ASP GLY ILE LEU ASP THR CYS GAC ATC AAG ACC AGA AGC TGG AGC|TAT GGT CAG TTT GAA GAT GGC ATC CTG GAC ACT TGC  802 LEU TYR VAL MET ASP ARG ALA GLN MET ASP LEU SER GLY ARG GLY ASN PRO ILE LYS VAL CTG TAT GTG ATG GAC AGA GCA CAA ATG GAC CTC TCT GGA AGA GGG AAT CCC ATC AAA GTC                                  66 mer|  862 SER ARG VAL GLY SER ALA MET VAL ASN ALA LYS ASP ASP GLU GLY VAL LEU VAL GLY SER AGC CGT GTG GGG TCT GCA ATG GTG AAT GCC AAA GAT GAC GAA GGT GTC CTC GTT GGA TCC  922 TRP ASP ASN ILE TYR ALA TYR GLY VAL PRO PRO SER ALA TRP THR GLY SER VAL ASP ILE TGG GAC AAT ATC TAT GCC TAT GGC GTC CCC CCA TCG GCC TGG ACT GGA AGC GTT GAC ATT  982 LEU LEU GLU TYR ARG SER SER GLU ASN PRO VAL ARG TYR GLY GLN CYS TRP VAL PHE ALA CTA TTG GAA TAC CGG AGC TCT GAG AAT CCA GTC CGG TAT GGC CAA TGC TGG GTT TTT GCT 1042 GLY VAL PHE ASN THR PHE LEU ARG CYS LEU GLY ILE PRO ALA ARG ILE VAL THR ASN TYR GGT GTC TTT AAC ACA TTT TTA CGA TGC CTT GGA ATA CCA GCA AGA ATT GTT ACC AAT TAT 1102 PHE SER ALA HIS ASP ASN ASP ALA ASN LEU GLN MET ASP ILE PHE LEU GLU GLU ASP GLY TTC TCT GCC CAT GAT AAT GAT GCC AAT TTG CAA ATG GAC ATC TTC CTG GAA GAA GAT GGG 1162 ASN VAL ASN SER LYS LEU THR LYS ASP SER VAL TRP ASN TYR HIS CYS TRP ASN GLU ALA AAC GTG AAT TCC AAA CTC ACC AAG GAT TCA GTG TGG AAC TAC CAC TGC TGG AAT GAA GCA 1222 TRP MET THR ARG PRO ASP LEU PRO VAL GLY PHE GLY GLY TRP GLN ALA VAL ASP SER THR TGG ATG ACA AGG CCT GAC CTT CCT GTT GGA TTT GGA GGC TGG CAA GCT GTG GAC AGC ACC 1282 PRO GLN GLU ASN SER ASP GLY MET TYR ARG CYS GLY PRO ALA SER VAL GLN ALA ILE LYS CCC CAG GAA AAT AGC GAT GGC ATG TAT CGG TGT GGC CCC GCC TCG GTT CAA GCC ATC AAG 1342 HIS GLY HIS VAL CYS PHE GLN PHE ASP ALA PRO PHE VAL PHE ALA GLU VAL ASN SER ASP CAC GGC CAT GTC TGC TTC CAA TTT GAT GCA CCT TTT GTT TTT GCA GAG GTC AAC AGC GAC 1402 LEU ILE TYR ILE THR ALA LYS LYS ASP GLY THR HIS VAL VAL GLU ASN VAL ASP ALA THR CTC ATT TAC ATT ACA GCT AAG AAA GAT GGC ACT CAT GTG GTG GAA AAT GTG GAT GCC ACC 1462 HIS ILE GLY LYS LEU ILE VAL THR LYS GLN ILE GLY GLY ASP GLY MET MET ASP ILE THR CAC ATT GGG AAA TTA ATT GTG ACC AAA CAA ATT GGA GGA GAT GGC|ATG ATG GAT ATT ACT 1522 ASP THR TYR LYS PHE GLN GLU GLY GLN GLU GLU GLU ARG LEU ALA LEU GLU THR ALA LEU GAT ACT TAC AAA TTC CAA GAA GGT CAA GAA GAA GAG AGA TTG GCC CTA GAA ACT GCC CTG 20 mer| 1582 MET TYR GLY ALA LYS LYS PRO LEU ASN THR GLU GLY VAL MET LYS SER ARG SER ASN VAL ATG TAC GGA GCT AAA AAG CCC CTC AAC ACA GAA GGT GTC ATG AAA TCA AGG TCC AAC GTT 1642 ASP MET ASP PHE GLU VAL GLU ASN ALA VAL LEU GLY LYS ASP PHE LYS LEU SER ILE THR GAC ATG GAC TTT GAA GTG GAA AAT GCT GTG CTG GGA AAA GAC TTC AAG CTC TCC ATC ACC 1702 PHE ARG ASN ASN SER HIS ASN ARG TYR THR ILE THR ALA TYR LEU SER ALA ASN ILE THR TTC CGG AAC AAC AGC CAC AAC CGT TAC ACC ATC ACA GCT TAT CTC TCA GCC AAC ATC ACC 1762 PHE TYR THR GLY VAL PRO LYS ALA GLU PHE LYS LYS GLU THR PHE ASP VAL THR LEU GLU TTC TAC ACC GGG GTC CCG AAG GCA GAG TTC AAG AAG GAG ACG TTC GAC GTG ACG CTG GAG 1822 PRO LEU SER PHE LYS LYS GLU ALA VAL LEU ILE GLN ALA GLY GLU TYR MET GLY GLN LEU CCC TTG TCC TTC AAG AAA GAG GCG GTG CTG ATC CAA GCC GGC GAG TAC ATG GGT CAG CTG 1882 LEU GLU GLN ALA SER LEU HIS PHE PHE VAL THR ALA ARG ILE ASN GLU THR ARG ASP VAL CTG GAA CAA GCG TCC CTG CAC TTC TTT GTC ACA GCT CGC ATC AAT GAG ACC AGG GAT GTT 1942 LEU ALA LYS GLN LYS SER THR VAL LEU THR ILE PRO GLU ILE ILE ILE LYS VAL ARG GLY CTG GCC AAG CAA AAG TCC ACC GTG CTA ACC ATC CCT GAG ATC ATC ATC AAG GTC CGT GGC 2002 THR GLN VAL VAL GLY SER ASP MET THR VAL THR VAL GLN PHE THR ASN PRO LEU LYS GLU ACT CAG GTA GTT GGT TCT GAC ATG ACT GTG ACA GTT CAG TTT ACC AAT CCT TTA AAA GAA 2062 THR LEU ARG ASN VAL TRP VAL HIS LEU ASP GLY PRO GLY VAL THR ARG PRO MET LYS LYS ACC CTG CGA AAT GTC TGG GTA CAC CTG GAT GGT CCT GGA GTA ACA AGA CCA ATG AAG AAG 2122 MET PHE ARG GLU ILE ARG PRO ASN SER THR VAL GLN TRP GLU GLU VAL CYS ARG PRO TRP ATG TTC CGT GAA ATC CGG CCC AAC TCC ACC GTG CAG TGG GAA GAA GTG TGC CGG CCC TGG 2182 VAL SER GLY HIS ARG LYS LEU ILE ALA SER MET SER SER ASP SER LEU ARG HIS VAL TYR GTC TCT GGG CAT CGG AAG CTG ATA GCC AGC ATG AGC AGT GAC TCC CTG AGA CAT GTG TAT 2242 GLY GLU LEU ASP VAL GLN ILE GLN ARG ARG PRO SER MET §§§ ATGCACAGGAAGCTGAGATGAAC GGC GAG CTG GAC GTG CAG ATT CAA AGA CGA CCT TCC ATG TGA  2307 CCTGGCATTTGGCCTCTTGTAGTCTTGGCTAAGGAAATTCTAACGCAAAAATAGCTCTTGCTTTGACTTAGGTGTGAAGA  2387 CCCAGACAGGACTGCAGAGGGCCCCAGAGTGGAGATCCCACATATTTCAAAAACATACTTTTCCAAACCCAGGCTATTCG  2467 GCAAGGAAGTTAGTTTTTAATCTCTCCACCTTCCAAAGAGTGCTAAGCATTAGCTTTAATTAAGCTCTCATAGCTCATAA  2547 GAGTAACAGTCATCATTTATCATCACAAATGGCTACATCTCCAAATATCAGTGGGCTCTCTTACCAGGGAGATTTGCTCA  2627 ATACCTGGCCTCATTTAAAACAAGACTTCAGATTCCCCACTCAGCCTTTTGGGAATAATAGCACATGATTTGGGCTCTAG  2707 AATTCCAGTCCCCTTTCTCGGGGTCAGGTTCTACCCTCCATGTGAGAATATTTTTCCCAGGACTAGAGCACAACATAATT  2787 TTTATTTTTGGCAAAGCCAGAAAAAGATCTTTCATTTTGCACCTGCAGCCAAGCAAATGCCTGCCAAATTTTAGATTTAC  2867 CTTGTTAGAAGAGGTGGCCCCATATTAACAAATTGCATTTGTGGGAAACTTAACCACCTACAAGGAGATAAGAAAGCAGG  2947 TGCAACACTCAAGTCTATTGAATAATGTAGTTTTGTGATGCATTTTATAGAATGTGTCACACTGTGGCCTGATCAGCAGG  3027 AGCCAATATCCCTTACTTTAACCCTTTCTGGGATGCAATACTAGGAAGTAAAGTGAAGAATTTATCTCTTTAGTTAGTGA  3107 TTATATTTCACCCATCTCTCAGGAATCATCTCCTTTGCAGAATGATGCAGGTTCAGGTCCCCTTTCAGAGATATAATAAG  3187 CCCAACAAGTTGAAGAAGCTGGCGGATCTAGTGACCAGATATATAGAAGGACTGCAGCCACTGATTCTCTCTTGTCCTTC  3267 ACATCACCATTTTGAGACCTCAGCTTGGCACTCAGGTGCTGAAGGGTAATATGGACTCAGCCTTGCAAATAGCCAGTGCT  3347 AGTTCTGACCCAACCACAGAGGATGCTGACATCATTTGTATTATGTTCCAAGGCTACTACAGAGAAGGCTGCCTGCTATG  3427 TATTTGCAAGGCTGATTTATGGTCAGAATTTCCCTCTGATATGTCTAGGGTGTGATTTAGGTCAGTAGACTGTGATTCTT  3507 AGCAAAAAATGAACAGTGATAAGTATACTGGGGGCAAAATCAGAATGGAATGCTCTGGTCTATATAACCACATTTCTGAG  3587 CCTTTGAGACTGTTCCTGAGCCTTCAGCACTAACCTATGAGGGTGAGCTGGTCCCCTCTATATATACATCATACTTAACT  3667 TTACTAAGTAATCTCACAGCATTTGCCAAGTCTCCCAATATCCAATTTTAAAATGAAATGCATTTTGCTAGACAGTTAAA  3747 CTGGCTTAACTTAGTATATTATTATTAATTACAATGTAATAGAAGCTTAAAATAAAGTTAAACTGATTATAAAAAAAAAA  3827 AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

TABLE 4 $\left. {p\quad{FXIII}\text{-}13\quad 1{ac}\quad P}\rightarrow{\underset{44\quad{aa}}{\underset{︸}{\begin{matrix} {Met} & \quad & {Glu} & \quad & \quad & {Ser} & {Lys} \\ \quad & {1{acZ}} & \quad & \quad & \quad & \quad & \quad \\ {ATG} & \quad & {GAA} & \ldots & \ldots & {TCA} & {AAA} \end{matrix}}}\quad\underset{732\quad{aa}}{\underset{︸}{\begin{matrix} {Met} & \quad & {Ser} & {Glu} & \quad & {Ser} & {Met} & {STOP} \\ \quad & {FXIII} & \quad & \quad & \quad & \quad & \quad & \quad \\ {ATG} & \quad & {TCA} & {GAA} & \ldots & {TCC} & {ATG} & {TGA} \end{matrix}}}} \right.$ $\left. {p\quad{FXIII}\text{-}{C4}\quad{trc}\quad P}\rightarrow{\underset{44\quad{aa}}{\underset{︸}{\begin{matrix} {Met} & \quad & {Glu} & \quad & \quad & {Ser} & {Lys} \\ \quad & {1{acZ}} & \quad & \quad & \quad & \quad & \quad \\ {ATG} & \quad & {GAA} & \ldots & - & {TCA} & {AAA} \end{matrix}}}\underset{732\quad{aa}}{\underset{︸}{\begin{matrix} {Met} & \quad & {Ser} & {Glu} & \quad & {Ser} & {Met} & {STOP} \\ \quad & {FXIII} & \quad & \quad & \quad & \quad & \quad & \quad \\ {ATG} & \quad & {TCA} & {GAA} & \ldots & {TCC} & {ATG} & {TGA} \end{matrix}}}} \right.$ $\left. {{pMB259}\quad 1{ac}\quad P}\rightarrow{\underset{377\quad{aa}}{\underset{︸}{\begin{matrix} {Met} & \quad & {Thr} & \quad & \quad & {Asp} & {Pro} & {Asp} \\ \quad & {1{acZ}} & \quad & \quad & \quad & \quad & \quad & \quad \\ {ATG} & \quad & {ACC} & \ldots & \ldots & {GAT} & {GGG} & {GAT} \end{matrix}}}\quad\underset{696\quad{aa}}{\underset{︸}{\begin{matrix} {Pro} & \quad & {Arg} & \quad & {Gly} & \quad & \quad & {Ser} & {Met} & {STOP} \\ \quad & 37 & \quad & 38 & \quad & 39 & \quad & \quad & \quad & \quad \\ {CCC} & \quad & {CGG} & \quad & {GGC} & \quad & \ldots & {TCC} & {ATG} & {TGA} \end{matrix}}}} \right.$ aa = amino acids

APPENDIX Example 1 from German Patent Application P 36 24 453.8 a) Construction of an expression vector for animal cells The plasmid pSV2dhfr (Lee et al., loc. cit.) was cut with HindIII and EcoRI, and the 2.65 kb vector fragment which has the SV40 early promotor was isolated. A 67 bp HindIII-EcoRI fragment from pUC12 STOP (Broker and Amann, APPl. Microbiol. Biotechnol. 23 (1986) 294-296) was ligated into the vector which had been pretreated in this way, which results in the plasmid pSV2 STOP. On the 67 bp fragment from pUC12 STOP there are translation stop codons in all three reading frames. pSV2 STOP was linearized with SacI, and the resulting 3′ protruding end was removed using the 3′→5′ exonuclease activity of DNA polymerase I. Then digestion with EcoRI was carried out. After ligation with an EcoRI-HpaI fragment 133 bp in size from pBB3 (B. Bourachot et al., EMBO J. 1 (1982) 895-900), which has the SV40 polyadenylation signal for early transcripts, it was possible to obtain the expres- sion vector pSVA STOP1. The polyadenylation site can also be isolated from the vector pIG6 (Bourachot et al., loc. cit.). It is pos- sible in exactly the same way to isolate from the SV40 gene the 133 bp BamHI-HpaI fragment, to fill in the BamHI cleavage site, and to attach an EcoRI linker. pSVA STOP1 thus has, between the SV40 early promotor and the SV40 polyadenylation signal for early transcripts, a cloning polylinker with three unique restriction sites (HindIII-SalI-XbaI) and a sequence with translation stops in all three reading frames. c) Construction of DHFR expression vectors for co- transfection The starting point for the DHFR vectors used for the co- transfection was the plasmid pMTVdhfr (Lee et al., loc. cit.). pMTVdhfr was cut with BglII, and the protruding 5′ ends of the DNA were filled in using DNA polymerase I (Klenow fragment). After digestion with EcoRI, a fragment 4.47 kb in size was isolated and ligated with a 133 bp EcoRI-HpaI fragment from pBB3 (Bourachot et al., loc. cit.). The new plasmid pMTVAdhfr has the mouse DHFR cDNA flanked by MMTV-LTR and the SV40 polyadenylation site for early transcripts. pSVOAdhfr was obtained from pMTVAdhfr by deletion of a HindIII fragment which is 1450 bp in size and has the MMTV-LTR. Neither pMTVAdhfr nor pSVOAdhfr have mRNA splice sites. 

1. A isolated DNA having a sequence as set forth in FIG. 6 or degenerate variants thereof or a sequence complementary to the sequence set forth in FIG. 6 or degenerate variants thereof.
 2. A vector containing a DNA as claimed in claim
 1. 3. A procaryotic or eucaryotic host cell transformed with DNA vector as claimed in claim
 2. 